"Lovie Smith, he loved what I did as a special teamer and that's what he wanted from me, no matter what," Graham said, via USA Today. "So I could go out and practice, get six interceptions at corner, but no matter what I was going to be Corey Graham, special teamer."

Graham spent his first five seasons in Chicago, where he started just 10 games, nine of them in 2008. He has started the past 10 games for the Ravens, who were decimated by injuries in the secondary this season. Graham's two-interception performance propelled the Ravens into Sunday's AFC Championship Game against the New England Patriots.

Graham also pointed out that Smith overlooked Brendon Ayanbadejo, who filled in as a starter for Ray Lewis for three games this season, when the two were with the Bears (2007 to 2009).

To be fair to Smith, the two were stacked behind some talented players in Chicago -- Brian Urlacher, Charles Tillman and Tim Jennings -- and neither was a starter in Baltimore when the 2012 campaign started.

What Graham's story displays is that every season there are players who step up when given a chance, and who end up playing a pivotal role in some of the season's biggest games.